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A Way with Words - language, linguistics, and callers from all over

Hot Mess - 8 February 2016

A Way with Words - language, linguistics, and callers from all over

A Way with Words

Language Learning, Society & Culture, Education

4.62.3K Ratings

🗓️ 8 February 2016

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Sneaky contract lingo, advice for writing well, and preserving a dying language. Say you’re scrolling through an online transaction where you’re asked to read the “Terms and Conditions.” Do you actually read them or just check the box and move on? If you move on, watch out for the Herod’s clause. Plus: When does your own communication style make you sound out-of-date? A 50-something boss wants suggestions on speaking with and writing for his younger co-workers. Finally, if we lose a language, how many of our childhood memories perish in the process? Also, “dark as Egypt,” “not quite cricket,” “down to the lick log,” “light dawns on Marblehead,” “sneezing to the truth,” and hot mess. Hear hundreds of free episodes and learn more on the A Way with Words website: https://waywordradio.org. Be a part of the show: call or text 1 (877) 929-9673 toll-free in the United States and Canada; elsewhere in the world, call or text +1 619 800 4443. Send voice notes or messages via WhatsApp 16198004443. Email words@waywordradio.org. Copyright Wayword, Inc., a 501(c)(3) corporation. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to Away With Words to Show About Language and how we use it. I'm Grant Barrett.

0:03.9

And I'm Martha Barnett. Let's say you're doing a transaction online. And you get to that part where you're supposed to check the box that says, I have read the terms and conditions. Do you really stop and read the terms and conditions? It's anti-American.

0:18.5

It's like a novella in there.

0:20.0

Who's going to read that?

0:20.8

I know.

0:21.3

I just bought a piece of software that I'm waiting to use.

0:23.4

I'm really excited.

0:24.1

I have a project I'm working on. No, I'm not reading the book.

0:27.4

Well, it's not just in this country. A couple of years ago, a security firm set up a Wi-Fi hotspot in London, and anybody was free to go and use this service, but the terms and conditions

0:38.6

included language indicating that the users agreed to sign over their firstborn child,

0:43.9

quote, for the duration of eternity.

0:46.7

How many people did it?

0:48.6

Well, not...

0:49.3

How many people clicked the box?

0:50.5

Not that many, but some people did.

0:53.2

I'm pretty surprised it wasn't all of them.

0:55.2

Right?

0:55.9

I know.

0:56.6

When's the last time you've stopped and read all of those terms of conditions? Well, maybe the software stuff is easier than the, the Wi-Fi always feels a little dicey. You don't know that you're connecting to a real network, right? You've trained me about Wi-Fi, yeah. You just don't know what you're passing through the traffic. Yeah.

1:08.3

But where are all those children now?

1:10.1

Good question.

1:12.0

It turns out it was a stunt by a security firm to raise awareness about the importance of reading fine print. But what's interesting to me is the term that they use for this sneaky contract language. They called it the Herod clause. Herod, as in the department store or the biblical dude? The biblical dude, the bad guy, H-E-R-O-D. You know. He's like the baddest of the bad in the Bible, right? Oh, he was terrible. He was the bad guy who ordered the deaths of all the young males in Bethlehem because he'd heard another king was... Yes, the firstborn, yeah. Yeah. Herod Claus. The world of language is super interesting, and that's what we talk about on this show. If you want to find out more, give us a call. 8779-9-6673. Send your questions and stories and comments and jokes and everything else to us in email. Words at Waywardrad.org or hit us up on Twitter at the handle W-A-Y-W-O-R-D.

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